This manuscript contains about 180 illustrations of people, plants, and animals in New France (a French colony in North America)—including a unicorn Codex Canadensis by Jenny Keller and Dr. Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank
Between 6000 and 1000 B.C.E., thousands of nomadic Native Americans travelled and lived along the Mississippi and Ohio rivers, making enigmatic, carefully carved stones known today as bannerstones. Bannerstones, an introduction by Dr. Anna Blume
A bag that belonged to the first ordained Native American Methodist minister Anishinaabe shoulder bag by The Metropolitan Museum of Art
From quills to beads: the bandolier bag The bandolier bag by Dr. Adriana Greci Green and Dr. Steven Zucker
This outfit was likely made for a British lieutenant and gifted to him in a ritual exchange to show mutual respect. Global trade and an 18th-century Anishinaabe outfit by Dr. David W. Penney, National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institution and Dr. Steven Zucker
These bags imitated the ones European soldiers carried their ammunition in, and were worn during ceremonies. Bandolier Bag by Dr. Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank